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The
BANNER
Vol. XXIX, Issue 11
California Baptist College
Wm
IIK^H.^
iff!
wis
A CBC First
The Socratic Club is
delighted to be hosting a dance
ensemble from the University
of California at Irvine. The
troop will be presenting 'An
Introduction to the Dance': a
program designed to
demonstrate and explain the
wide variety of approaches
and styles in the media of
movement.
The program will be held in
the gymnasium on Thrusday,.
May 2at'7:00 P.M., admission
is free.
The UCI Dance Touring
Ensemble has won international acclaim for its excellence in performance and
diverse programs featuring a
varietv of dance stvles. At col
leges and universities, elementary, junior high and high
schools, and at public concerts
and conventions, the Dance
Touring ensemble
demonstrates and performs
dance using the best original
choreography by faculty, and
students at the University of
California at Irvine.
The UCI Dance Department
is one of the top five departments in the United States and
believes dancers should be able
to perform all forms of dance.
Their concerts reflect this
philosophy by including
several diverse styles of dance.
These concerts may include
classical ballet, modern ballet,
modern dance, jazz, historical
dance, ethnic forms, tap or
break dance.
The performers are all
dance majors who come from
all over the world to study at
UCI. Those dancers in the
Ensemble have had extensive
training and touring experience. They are equally accustomed to the proscenium
stage or unusal performing
spaces, i.e. gymnasiums, shopping centers.
The Ensemble's director.
Dr. Janice Plastino. is Professor of Dance at the University of California at Irvine.
She has choreographed over
50 original dance works, 25
musicals, and has directed
opera in Alice Tully Hall at
Lincoln Center, New York
City.
See First, pg.4
Tuck Reprimands Faculty
President Tuck, in a move
that left some faculty enraged,
delivered a searing fifty
minute discussion on faculty
participation, and iack
thereof, in the college's new
goals.
The speech, which was given
at the regular faculty meeting
on April 1, included allegations of lack of student-
teacher contact, class scheduling at times convenient for
teachers only, and faculty not
spending enough time in their
offices.
Tuck, according to some
present, did however note that
the speech was only meant for
those who weren't doing their
jobs. He went on to say that
those individuals were
welcome to move to schools
where they found programs
more ideally suited to their
tastes.
When questioned, Dr. Tuck
has no "specific comment",
noting that the discussion
"was a family matter between
myself and the faculty."
Tuck did note, however,
that he is concerned about
some current "scheduling problems" and is working to
spread the schedule out in a
way that will be beneficial to
students.
"Dean Carleton and myself
are also working to encourage
faculty to have increased
outside-of-class contact, informal exchange in informal settings, and close faculty student
relationships," added Tuck,
"we want the college to be
known by these things."
Faculty reaction was mixed.
Some faculty members while
agreeing with Tuck's
arguments disagreed with his
method. One member noted
that "a good reprimand is like
a good sermon, it leaves the
listener with a desire to
improve."
Other faculty members
disagreed with both the
arguments and the methods.
"He's not used to dealing with
post-secondary educators,"
one upset faculty member
noted, adding, "some of the
things he said are just wrong
and I think will be detrimental
to faculty morale overall. He
April 19, 1985
Mascot Against the Wall
A visit to the Van Dyne
Field House can be an experience to improve one's
physical condition. Weight
training, basketball and
volleyball are just a few of the
ways CBC students can
achieve this. Now there is a
new reason to visit the gym,
and you can watch a work of
art in the making.
Evidence of this work has
been in the making for two
months now, but the concept
has had to wait for any visual
proof since early October. The
idea was originated by ASB
President Allen Payton. He
wanted a mural of the CBC
emblem of a Lancer on
horseback. After the initial
idea was passed by the Council, Payton talked to Mack
Brandon, Professor of Art,
about the possibilities of the
mural being created by the Art
Department.
Payton had hoped that the
mural would be completed by
November 2. 1984 for the Inauguration ceremonies for Dr.
Tuck. Delays in the production of the sketch made this
goal impossible. The final
sketch and the approval of it
by the Administration came
during lnterterm. The sketch
is by Brandon. Neither Payton
nor Brandon would venture a
guess on the completion date
of the mural.
See Mack, pg.4
Unsung Heroine
by Scott W. Norman
It's 7:58 in the morning. My
eyes are only half open as 1
plou down the stairwell and into the first floor lounge. Suddenly, from around, the corner
the sound of a vacuum cleaner
fills the air.
"Good morning!" comes
the all-too-cheery greeting.
"Mmurrnin," I mutter, forcing a,smile. - _^..._
"Have a nice day." she says
with-a smile.
"Thank you; you too," I
reply, realizing that another
good grumpy mood has just
been shot by a smile and a
cheery "hello." Who is the
culprit, the bearer of all of this
cheerfulness? It's non-other
than Nellie Montoya. the unsung heroine of Smith Hall.
Nellie, as everyone knows
her, has been working in
Smith Hall three years as of
last February. She moved to
Riverside from El Paso, Texas
when her daughter, a
registered nurse at UCR, told
her about the job at CBC.
Nellie now lives in the Santa
Fe Apartments, a senior
citizen's complex near the
school.
Nellie was born December
5, 1920 in El Paso. Orpahned
at the age of eight, she and her
younger sister were raised by
their grandmother. Nellie
dropped out of school in the
sixth grade and has been working ever since. She plans to
See Nellie, pg.4
doesn't realize what we're up
against out here."
However, other faculty
members found the approach
refreshing. Dr. Wayne Swin-
dall stated that, "it's nice to
See Tuck, pg.4
Keaggy to
Appear
Phil Keaggy, who is recognized as one of the top names in
Christian music, will be in
concert at 7 p.m. on April 19
in the Van Dyne Field House.
This is the first of three
"Concerts for the Hungry"
that the college will sponsor
this spring. Proceeds will go
toward famine relief in
Ethiopia through the Southern
Baptist Convention.
Keaggy has been lead
guitarist for the 70s band
Glass Harp and has toured
with such groups as Chicago,
Iron Butterfly and Yes.
The Face of Famine
by Joe Pinkerton
All too often our vision of Ethiopia is one induced by
the media. We see images of weak, starving, fly covered
ghosts of human beings, lying about on mats waiting for
relief workers to dispense supplies.
The few students who bothered to attend the ASCBC
sponsored World Compassion Banquet last Friday night
have a unique opportunity to see another side of the
issue from both a human angle as well as a political one.
In the person of Dr. Daniel Lema (a real life Ethiopian) the dinner goers were able to see and hear the story
of a proud, cultured people raped by politics and bad
luck.
Previously, my experience with Ethiopians have been
those emaciated, tear stained faces the media so loves to
adorn our television sets with. However, looking at Dr.
Lema (even more than listening) one could sense a
greater tragedy. Before us stood a man whose eyes and
countenance reflected an honorable heritage, one of
history (look in your bible sometime) and one cf hope
("Ethiopia should and could be the bread basket of
Eastern Africa"). In the comfort of the United States, it
is difficult to truly grasp the total, encompassing despair
of famine, but the eyes of Dr. Daniel Lema brought
those present a little nearer to understanding.
But there was more than feelings to be grappled with.
Dr. Lema presented an, albeit biased, perspective on the
problems facing his nation. The revolutionary communist government, in Lema's opinion, is the main
reason for the starvation facing his people. They're copying the "RussianModel" of agriculture. Need we say
more?
Lema continued to paint of refugees, civil war,
escape, brutal government, and famine. A complex
painting, but one that needed to be viewed. There were
other things about the dinner (some were forced to eat
rice while others ate steak), but the most striking was -
the eves of Dr. Daniel Lema.

The
BANNER
Vol. XXIX, Issue 11
California Baptist College
Wm
IIK^H.^
iff!
wis
A CBC First
The Socratic Club is
delighted to be hosting a dance
ensemble from the University
of California at Irvine. The
troop will be presenting 'An
Introduction to the Dance': a
program designed to
demonstrate and explain the
wide variety of approaches
and styles in the media of
movement.
The program will be held in
the gymnasium on Thrusday,.
May 2at'7:00 P.M., admission
is free.
The UCI Dance Touring
Ensemble has won international acclaim for its excellence in performance and
diverse programs featuring a
varietv of dance stvles. At col
leges and universities, elementary, junior high and high
schools, and at public concerts
and conventions, the Dance
Touring ensemble
demonstrates and performs
dance using the best original
choreography by faculty, and
students at the University of
California at Irvine.
The UCI Dance Department
is one of the top five departments in the United States and
believes dancers should be able
to perform all forms of dance.
Their concerts reflect this
philosophy by including
several diverse styles of dance.
These concerts may include
classical ballet, modern ballet,
modern dance, jazz, historical
dance, ethnic forms, tap or
break dance.
The performers are all
dance majors who come from
all over the world to study at
UCI. Those dancers in the
Ensemble have had extensive
training and touring experience. They are equally accustomed to the proscenium
stage or unusal performing
spaces, i.e. gymnasiums, shopping centers.
The Ensemble's director.
Dr. Janice Plastino. is Professor of Dance at the University of California at Irvine.
She has choreographed over
50 original dance works, 25
musicals, and has directed
opera in Alice Tully Hall at
Lincoln Center, New York
City.
See First, pg.4
Tuck Reprimands Faculty
President Tuck, in a move
that left some faculty enraged,
delivered a searing fifty
minute discussion on faculty
participation, and iack
thereof, in the college's new
goals.
The speech, which was given
at the regular faculty meeting
on April 1, included allegations of lack of student-
teacher contact, class scheduling at times convenient for
teachers only, and faculty not
spending enough time in their
offices.
Tuck, according to some
present, did however note that
the speech was only meant for
those who weren't doing their
jobs. He went on to say that
those individuals were
welcome to move to schools
where they found programs
more ideally suited to their
tastes.
When questioned, Dr. Tuck
has no "specific comment",
noting that the discussion
"was a family matter between
myself and the faculty."
Tuck did note, however,
that he is concerned about
some current "scheduling problems" and is working to
spread the schedule out in a
way that will be beneficial to
students.
"Dean Carleton and myself
are also working to encourage
faculty to have increased
outside-of-class contact, informal exchange in informal settings, and close faculty student
relationships" added Tuck,
"we want the college to be
known by these things."
Faculty reaction was mixed.
Some faculty members while
agreeing with Tuck's
arguments disagreed with his
method. One member noted
that "a good reprimand is like
a good sermon, it leaves the
listener with a desire to
improve."
Other faculty members
disagreed with both the
arguments and the methods.
"He's not used to dealing with
post-secondary educators"
one upset faculty member
noted, adding, "some of the
things he said are just wrong
and I think will be detrimental
to faculty morale overall. He
April 19, 1985
Mascot Against the Wall
A visit to the Van Dyne
Field House can be an experience to improve one's
physical condition. Weight
training, basketball and
volleyball are just a few of the
ways CBC students can
achieve this. Now there is a
new reason to visit the gym,
and you can watch a work of
art in the making.
Evidence of this work has
been in the making for two
months now, but the concept
has had to wait for any visual
proof since early October. The
idea was originated by ASB
President Allen Payton. He
wanted a mural of the CBC
emblem of a Lancer on
horseback. After the initial
idea was passed by the Council, Payton talked to Mack
Brandon, Professor of Art,
about the possibilities of the
mural being created by the Art
Department.
Payton had hoped that the
mural would be completed by
November 2. 1984 for the Inauguration ceremonies for Dr.
Tuck. Delays in the production of the sketch made this
goal impossible. The final
sketch and the approval of it
by the Administration came
during lnterterm. The sketch
is by Brandon. Neither Payton
nor Brandon would venture a
guess on the completion date
of the mural.
See Mack, pg.4
Unsung Heroine
by Scott W. Norman
It's 7:58 in the morning. My
eyes are only half open as 1
plou down the stairwell and into the first floor lounge. Suddenly, from around, the corner
the sound of a vacuum cleaner
fills the air.
"Good morning!" comes
the all-too-cheery greeting.
"Mmurrnin" I mutter, forcing a,smile. - _^..._
"Have a nice day." she says
with-a smile.
"Thank you; you too" I
reply, realizing that another
good grumpy mood has just
been shot by a smile and a
cheery "hello." Who is the
culprit, the bearer of all of this
cheerfulness? It's non-other
than Nellie Montoya. the unsung heroine of Smith Hall.
Nellie, as everyone knows
her, has been working in
Smith Hall three years as of
last February. She moved to
Riverside from El Paso, Texas
when her daughter, a
registered nurse at UCR, told
her about the job at CBC.
Nellie now lives in the Santa
Fe Apartments, a senior
citizen's complex near the
school.
Nellie was born December
5, 1920 in El Paso. Orpahned
at the age of eight, she and her
younger sister were raised by
their grandmother. Nellie
dropped out of school in the
sixth grade and has been working ever since. She plans to
See Nellie, pg.4
doesn't realize what we're up
against out here."
However, other faculty
members found the approach
refreshing. Dr. Wayne Swin-
dall stated that, "it's nice to
See Tuck, pg.4
Keaggy to
Appear
Phil Keaggy, who is recognized as one of the top names in
Christian music, will be in
concert at 7 p.m. on April 19
in the Van Dyne Field House.
This is the first of three
"Concerts for the Hungry"
that the college will sponsor
this spring. Proceeds will go
toward famine relief in
Ethiopia through the Southern
Baptist Convention.
Keaggy has been lead
guitarist for the 70s band
Glass Harp and has toured
with such groups as Chicago,
Iron Butterfly and Yes.
The Face of Famine
by Joe Pinkerton
All too often our vision of Ethiopia is one induced by
the media. We see images of weak, starving, fly covered
ghosts of human beings, lying about on mats waiting for
relief workers to dispense supplies.
The few students who bothered to attend the ASCBC
sponsored World Compassion Banquet last Friday night
have a unique opportunity to see another side of the
issue from both a human angle as well as a political one.
In the person of Dr. Daniel Lema (a real life Ethiopian) the dinner goers were able to see and hear the story
of a proud, cultured people raped by politics and bad
luck.
Previously, my experience with Ethiopians have been
those emaciated, tear stained faces the media so loves to
adorn our television sets with. However, looking at Dr.
Lema (even more than listening) one could sense a
greater tragedy. Before us stood a man whose eyes and
countenance reflected an honorable heritage, one of
history (look in your bible sometime) and one cf hope
("Ethiopia should and could be the bread basket of
Eastern Africa"). In the comfort of the United States, it
is difficult to truly grasp the total, encompassing despair
of famine, but the eyes of Dr. Daniel Lema brought
those present a little nearer to understanding.
But there was more than feelings to be grappled with.
Dr. Lema presented an, albeit biased, perspective on the
problems facing his nation. The revolutionary communist government, in Lema's opinion, is the main
reason for the starvation facing his people. They're copying the "RussianModel" of agriculture. Need we say
more?
Lema continued to paint of refugees, civil war,
escape, brutal government, and famine. A complex
painting, but one that needed to be viewed. There were
other things about the dinner (some were forced to eat
rice while others ate steak), but the most striking was -
the eves of Dr. Daniel Lema.